This chapter discusses the use of optics and photonics in the generation of energy and the use of optics in lighting. Energy use in data centers is discussed in Chapter 3, “Communications, Information Processing, and Data Storage.” Optics and photonics are very important in energy generation, in energy conservation, and in monitoring the effects of both on the environment. The main topic related to energy generation discussed in this chapter is solar energy. As noted in a previous report from the National Research Council (NRC): “Solar energy could potentially produce many times the current and projected future U.S. electricity consumption.”1 Inertial confinement fusion is a potential optical technique that could generate abundant energy in the future2,3 A recent article discusses the National Ignition Facility, which has a near-term goal of achieving ignition (defined as 1-MJ [megajoule] output energy from a fusion burn for 1 MJ of laser energy

2 Lindl, J.D., and E.I. Moses. 2011. Special topic: Plans for the National Ignition Campaign (NIC) on the National Ignition Facility (NIF): On the threshold of initiating ignition experiments. Physics of Plasmas (18)5:050901-050902. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3591001.

Citation Manager

Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top 30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a whole.Intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text on the opening pages of each chapter.
Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

Do not use for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for search engines.

OCR for page 127
5
Energy
INTRODUCTION
This chapter discusses the use of optics and photonics in the generation of
energy and the use of optics in lighting. Energy use in data centers is discussed in
Chapter 3, “Communications, Information Processing, and Data Storage.” Optics
and photonics are very important in energy generation, in energy conservation,
and in monitoring the effects of both on the environment. The main topic re-
lated to energy generation discussed in this chapter is solar energy. As noted in a
previous report from the National Research Council (NRC): “Solar energy could
potentially produce many times the current and projected future U.S. electricity
consumption.”1 Inertial confinement fusion is a potential optical technique that
could generate abundant energy in the future2,3 A recent article discusses the Na-
tional Ignition Facility, which has a near-term goal of achieving ignition (defined
as 1-MJ [megajoule] output energy from a fusion burn for 1 MJ of laser energy
1 NAS-NAE-NRC. 2010. America’s Energy Future: Technology and Transformation. Washington,
D.C.: The National Academies Press, p. 20.
2 Lindl, J.D., and E.I. Moses. 2011. Special topic: Plans for the National Ignition Campaign (NIC)
on the National Ignition Facility (NIF): On the threshold of initiating ignition experiments. Physics
of Plasmas (18)5:050901-050902. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3591001.
3 Dunne, M., E.I. Moses, P. Amendt, T. Anklam, A. Bayramian, E. Bliss, B. Debs, R. Deri, T. Diaz
de la Rubia, B. El-Dasher, J.C. Farmer, D. Flowers, K. J. Kramer, L. Lagin, J.F. Latkowski, J. Lindl, W.
Meier, R. Miles, G.A. Moses, S. Reyes, V. Roberts, R. Sawicki, M. Spaeth, and E. Storm. 2011. Timely
delivery of laser inertial fusion energy (LIFE). Fusion Science and Technology 60:19-27.
127

OCR for page 127
128 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
input into the target system).4 This paper mentions that plans are already underway
to define the laser driver for inertial fusion energy applications. However, inertial
confinement fusion is not discussed in greater detail in this chapter partially be-
cause a current NRC study is specifically addressing this topic; the interim report
of that study was recently released.5 Optics can also be used in isotope separation,6
but very little information is available on that subject at the unclassified level, and
so it was not considered in this unclassified study. Also, optical sensors can be used
to assist in oil drilling and recovery, as is briefly discussed in Box 5.1.
Solar energy is discussed here with respect to its primary use by electric utili-
ties competing against other forms of electricity generation such as new natural
gas- or coal-fired electricity generation plants. For an electric utility, sunlight can be
concentrated to generate solar power in a manner potentially more cost-effective,
depending on the cost of the concentrating technology, than would be possible with
competing forms of electricity generation in new electric power plants. Concentrat-
ing solar power (CSP) uses a heated liquid and a turbine. The heated liquid stores
energy until it is converted to electricity. This is advantageous because one of the
issues with solar energy generation is the storage of energy for periods of time when
the Sun is not out, such as at night and in overcast situations. Concentrated photo­
voltaic (CPV) power generation involves the use of solar cells after the incoming
light is concentrated. For CPV, the price of the actual solar cell is not as critical in
that the area covered by solar cells can be reduced up to 2,000 times as compared
4 From Willner, A.E., R.L. Byer, C.J. Chang-Hasnain, S.R Forrest, H. Kressel, H. Kogelnik, G.J.
Tearney, C.H. Townes, and M.N. Zervas. 2012. Optics and photonics: Key enabling technologies.
Proceedings of the IEEE 100(Special Centennial Issue):1604-1643: “The year 2009 saw the comple-
tion of the National Ignition Facility (NIF), a 2-MJ, single shot laser facility at Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory (Livermore, CA) designed to compress targets to generate fusion burns and
ignition of a target for energy generation. The NIF laser has now been operating for three years at
close to 200 shots per year, with a greater than 95% availability rate for requested shots on targets.
The goal in the near term is to achieve ignition defined as 1-MJ output energy from a fusion burn
for 1 MJ of laser energy input into the target system. Plans are already underway to define the laser
driver for inertial fusion energy applications.” Ibid. p. 1609: “We know that a fusion reaction works
at even larger power scales. What we have yet to demonstrate is a nuclear burn in a laboratory under
controlled conditions. When this is accomplished, it will be a “man on the moon” moment. Laser
inertial fusion will open the possibility of amplifying the laser drive power by 30-100 times and in
turn allow the operation of an electrical power plant with GWe output for 35-MWe laser power in-
put. Based on our knowledge of the rate at which new infrastructure is adopted, we can predict that
fusion energy will take 25-50 years to make a significant impact on our energy supply. By that time
it will probably be known simply as laser energy” (p. 1608).
5 National Research Council. 2012. Interim Report—Status of the Study “An Assessment of the Pros-
pects for Inertial Fusion Energy.” Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press.
6 Broad, W.J. 2011. “Laser Advances in Nuclear Fuel Stir Terror Fear.” New York Times. August 20.
Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/21/science/earth/21laser.html?pagewanted=all. Ac-
cessed July 24, 2012.

OCR for page 127
Energy 129
BOX 5.1
Oil and Gas Production
Optical systems are increasingly being used by the oil and gas industry as a means for
monitoring wells, allowing increased production, and mitigating risks. Industry adoption of
optics has been relatively recent, as the high pressure and temperature conditions in a well
reduce the lifetime of conventional fiber optics to be substantially shorter than the 20 years
over which most wells are expected to produce. Since 2000, fiber-based distributed temperature
sensors have become common tools for monitoring the performance of wells, and have proven
to be a robust source of information about the well performance.
Distributed temperature sensors rely on the fiber locally changing temperature and scat-
tering light back up the fiber owing to the temperature change. Thus, when combined with
a pulsed laser source, the backscattered light allows a temperature profile of the well to be
determined. The temperature of the fiber is changed locally owing to fluids flowing into the
well bore (Joule-Thomson effect). This information is combined with geothermal models to
accurately locate and quantify fluid flows in the well.
More recently, fiber systems have been deployed for distributed acoustic sensing (DAS),
to monitor well activity during several phases of well completion. DAS uses a principle similar
to that for distributed temperature sensors, but uses acoustic waves generated from within the
well to alter the refractive index of the fiber probe. The backscattered radiation from this index
variation can be collected and processed to discriminate between various sources and depths.
These systems offer reliable discrimination between perforation clusters that are active during
the acid injection stage and those that are taking most of the proppant throughout the job.
This technology also shows promise for many other functions, such as sand detection and gas
breakthrough detection.
SOURCES: Algeroy, J., J. Lovell, G. Tirado, R. Meyyappan, G. Brown, R. Greenaway, M.
Carney, J. Meyer, J. Davies, and I. Pinzon. 2010. Permanent monitoring: Taking it to the
reservoir. Oilfield Review 22(1):34-41; Molenaar, M., D. Hill, P. Webster, E. Fidan, and B.
Birch. 2011. “First Downhole Application of Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) for Hydraulic
Fracturing Monitoring and Diagnostics.” Society of Petroleum Engineers Hydraulic Fracturing
Technology Conference, January 24-26, 2011, The Woodlands, Tex.
to non-concentrating systems. With CPV, higher-cost, and more efficient, solar
cells can be used. The cost of the concentrators will be the main issue, as stated
in the NAS-NAE-NRC report Overview and Summary of America’s Energy Future:
Technology and Transformation published in 2010: “In general, nearly all of the costs
involved in using renewable energy for power generation are associated with the
manufacturing and installation of the equipment.”7 For high-concentration CPV,
more concentrating options are available for larger electric plants, and so CPV may
favor utility-scale plants over the smaller plants used by an individual. Photosyn-
thesis is also briefly discussed below as another method of capturing light from the
Sun and turning it into energy. However, it is clear that a successful deployment of
7 NAS-NAE-NRC. 2010. Overview and Summary of America’s Energy Future, p. 22.

OCR for page 127
130 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
solar power on a large scale in the United States will need the technology to have
reached cost parity with current energy sources. The energy delivered to the grid
as electricity will, for solar, need to reach “grid parity”; the faster solar power can
do that, the better for the U.S. economy as a whole.
Solid-state (SS) lighting is clearly the next step in lighting. It has already become
entrenched in many niche applications and is moving quickly toward adoption as
the new standard for general lighting. The record efficiency for SS lighting today
is 231 lumens per watt (lm/W),8 compared to 4-15 lm/W for a conventional in-
candescent bulb, and approximately 55 lm/W for a compact fluorescent bulb. Cost
is the main issue preventing widespread adoptions of SS lighting, but substantial
progress is being made in lowering the cost of light-emitting diodes (LEDs).
In the 1998 NRC study Harnessing Light: Optical Science and Engineering for
the 21st Century,9 solar cells are discussed for space application, with a short sec-
tion on terrestrial application. At the time of that publication, the cost to purchase
solar cell panels for terrestrial application was $4.50 per watt (W), compared to the
current cost, which is as low as $0.75/W. LEDs, also called SS lighting, were barely
discussed in the 1998 report, in which Figure 3.12 shows efficiencies from 20-80
lm/W for LEDs, compared to the current record of 231 lm/W.
SOLAR POWER
Solar power has received great interest recently as a renewable energy solu-
tion capable of providing energy independence and environmental stability while
beginning to deliver power at a competitive price. Because of high costs relative to
other energy generation technologies, solar power currently satisfies only a small
fraction of the world’s energy need. Government support and private investments
have led to a boom of technical advances over the past years that have continued
to drive solar power toward eventually being a mainstream source of power.10
Solar power has great potential for home, off-grid, and utility-scale generation.
Solar cells have become common in applications for which grid power is not ac-
cessible (see Figure 5.1) or convenient, such as powering remote devices or small
handheld electronics. As will be seen in this chapter, utility-scale solar plants are not
yet competitive with alternative sources of energy, yet the cost of solar electricity
8 More information about Cree is available at http://www.cree.com/press/press_detail.asp?i=13049
45651119. Accessed December 17, 2011.
9 National Research Council. 1998. Harnessing Light: Optical Science and Engineering for the 21st
Century. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
10 Tyner, C. E., G.J. Kolb, M. Geyer, and M. Romero. 2001. “Concentrating Solar Power in 2001—An
IEA/SolarPACES Summary of Present Status and Future Prospects.” International Energy Agency—
SolarPACES. Available at http://www.solarpaces.org/Library/docs/CSP_Brochure_2001.pdf. Accessed
August 1, 2012.

OCR for page 127
Energy 131
FIGURE 5.1 Small solar cell installation monitoring the water supply in Shenandoah National Park
in Virginia.
is dropping, and it is reasonable to see a future in which solar power will be cost-
competitive for new electric power plants.
It typically requires a large capital investment to build solar plants for a life
cycle of a few decades, but once built they do not require period payments for fuel,
like fossil-fuel-powered electric plants do. Comparisons are therefore somewhat
complicated. A common metric for the economic viability of a solar installation
is dollars per watt produced ($/W), which divides the module cost by the peak
output power.
A more extensive measure of the economic feasibility of a solar power system
is provided by the levelized cost of energy (LCOE), which is commonly measured
in cents per kilowatt-hour (¢/kWh). This is a more realistic cost for an investor to
use when comparing a solar plant to other potential electricity generation alterna-
tives. The LCOE can be expanded to include known factors such as the financing
structure of the plant, incentives, and system degradation. Projecting the LCOE
accurately requires detailed information both on the system performance over the
lifetime of the plant and on the financial structure of the installation.11 The com-
plexity and variability of the assumptions used in this metric highlight a need for
11 Cambell, M. 2008. “The Drivers of the Levelized Cost of Electricity for Utility-Scale Photovol-
taics.” San Jose, Calif.: Sunpower Corporation. Available at http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2010/
ph240/vasudev1/docs/sunpower.pdf. Accessed July 24, 2012.

OCR for page 127
132 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
better economic modeling. A solar plant is different from a fossil-fuel electricity
generation plant in that most of the cost is in building the solar plant, but no fuel
must be purchased on a regular basis.
In 2011, the United States launched the SunShot Initiative (see Box 5.2 and
Figure 5.2.1), with the goal of advancing solar technology to be competitive with
conventional sources of electricity. This cost comparability, or grid parity, is very
important to the widespread adoption of solar power. Traditionally, grid parity is
BOX 5.2
The SunShot Initiative
“The DOE [Department of Energy] SunShot Initiative is a collaborative national initiative
to make solar energy cost competitive with other forms of energy by the end of the decade.
Reducing the installed cost of solar energy systems by about 75 percent will drive widespread,
large-scale adoption of this renewable energy technology and restore U.S. leadership in the
global clean energy race.” (See Figure 5.2.1.)
FIGURE 5.2.1 In this photograph of a concentrating solar power (CSP) technology, stretched
membrane heliostats with silvered polymer reflectors will be used as demonstration units at
the Solar Two central receiver. The Solar Two project will refurbish this 10-megawatt central
receiver power tower, known as Solar One. SOURCE: Image available at https://www.eere
multimedia.energy.gov/solar/.
SOURCE: The quotation above from the Department of Energy is available at http://www1.
eere.energy.gov/solar/sunshot/. Accessed November 23, 2011.

OCR for page 127
Energy 133
defined as cost per watt (energy/time) but occasionally as cost per kilowatt-hour
(energy). If watts are used, grid parity is reached when the power plants are equal
in price to build; if kilowatt-hours are used, grid parity is reached when “selling”
the different energy sources costs the same. In the latter case, solar includes the
free energy from the Sun, whereas coal-fired electricity generation includes the cost
of coal. The goal of competitive solar energy requires an LCOE of approximately
$0.06/kWh, which corresponds to approximately $1.00/W installed for a module.12
Installed cost will of course be more than production costs. There are already solar
modules less the $1.00/W for module cost.
Solar technologies fall primarily into two broad categories: (1) photovoltaics
(PV), which convert solar radiation directly into electricity, and (2) concentrating
solar power. CSP uses optical elements to focus the Sun’s energy, and a heated liq-
uid, along with a heat engine, to generate electricity. Once the Sun’s light is focused,
it can heat an intermediate material, which can be used to drive a turbine to gen-
erate electricity. Concentrated photovoltaics also concentrate the Sun’s radiation,
but not to the same extent that CSP does. With CPV, the light is concentrated so
that high-efficiency solar cells can be used without there being too much concern
about cell cost. The cost of the concentrating optics must of course now be consid-
ered. With current solar cells, the temperature of the cells must be kept near room
temperature in CPV in order to maintain high efficiency, and so an efficient heat-
removal process must be used. CPV solar cells have been measured at 1,000 Suns
concentration and 43 percent efficiency,13 and it is anticipated that at least 2,000
Suns concentration can be used, although it may cost some conversion efficiency.
Below, solar conversion optics that can work at higher temperatures are discussed.
These options also provide the potential to allow higher Sun concentration.
Photovoltaic Systems
As of 2010, approximately 39,611 megawatts (MW) of PV capacity had been
installed around the world, with most of that in Europe.14 Between 2010 and 2017,
the installed capacity of PV is expected to increase to more than 185,000 MW,
with Europe continuing to have the largest portion, but with the rest of the world
gaining market share as costs continue to decrease and newer technologies come to
market. The growth projections over this forecast period are shown in Figure 5.2.
12 More information on the U.S. Department of Energy SunShot Initiative is available at http://
www1.eere.energy.gov/solar/sunshot/. Accessed October 25, 2011.
13 Wiemer, M., V. Sabnis, and H. Yuen. 2011. 43.5% efficient lattice matched solar cells. Proceedings
of the SPIE 8108:810804-810804-5.
14 In comparison, the total net electricity generation for the United States alone was 602,076 MW
in 2010. More information is available at www.eia.gov/electricity/annual/pdf/table1.1.a.pdf. Accessed
June 4, 2012.

OCR for page 127
134 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
FIGURE 5.2 Forecasted installed capacity and growth rate of photovoltaic devices divided regionally. The base
year is 2010. SOURCE: “Global Solar Power Market.” Frost and Sullivan Analytics. July 2011. Reprinted with
permission.
The compound annual growth rate of these devices is projected to be 25 percent
from 2010 to 2017.
Despite the rapid growth in installed capacity over the next several years,
photovoltaics are still expected to provide for only a small part of the energy de-
mand in the regions highlighted in Figure 5.2. As a point of comparison, the total
electricity generated in the United States over the last few years has ranged from
about 300,000 MW to 400,000 MW.15 The primary barrier preventing wider accep-
tance of utility-scale PV generation is that it is still expected to be more expensive
than alternative energy sources over this 2010-2017 time frame. The PV industry
is still largely reliant on government subsidies and incentives to provide power at
an LCOE competitive with alternative energy sources. It is expected that a com-
petitive solar technology must be below $1.00/W peak installed cost. Most current
PV systems are substantially above this mark, even for the production cost alone,
as shown in Figure 5.3. There will be installation costs and possible cost of land
use for electric plants. As with all methods of generating electricity, there will be
environmental considerations, such as the impact on a desert when large areas are
covered by reflectors or solar cells. Current cost figures represent a drastic decrease
from the average production cost of $4.50/W in 1998, when the NRC’s Harnessing
Light16 was published.
15 The U.S. Energy Information Administration’s Electricity Monthly Update is available at http://
www.eia.gov/electricity/monthly/update/. Accessed July 24, 2012.
16 National Research Council. 1998. Harnessing Light.

OCR for page 127
Energy 135
FIGURE 5.3 Average cost per watt of current widely deployed photovoltaic technologies in 2011. SOURCE: “PV
Technology, Production and Cost Outlook: 2010-2015” (GTM Research). Reprinted with permission.
Investor literature for major solar cell manufacturers does promise reaching the
cost parity level of $1.00/W for installed cost around 2015.17,18 Obviously investor
literature may be optimistic, but major PV solar cell companies at least have plans
on how to meet the dollar per watt cost goals. The LCOE of photovoltaics continues
to drop due to manufacturing infrastructure improvements and more advanced
technologies becoming available.19 Figure 5.4 shows installed cost LCOEs for a
number of installed projects based on a very recent National Renewable Energy
Laboratory article.20
17 More information on the First Solar corporate overview, third quarter, 2011, is available at http://
www.firstsolar.com/. First Solar corporate overview accessed December 7, 2011.
18 More information on the SunPower third quarter 2011 earnings is available at http://us.sun
powercorp.com/. SunPower, November 3, 2011, Supplementary Slides accessed December 7, 2011.
19 For more about information about installed cost time lines for solar technology, see Appendix
C in this report.
20 National Renewable Energy Laboratory. 2011. “Cost of Utility-Scale Solar: One Quick Way to
Compare Projects.” Available at https://financere.nrel.gov/finance/content/cost-utility-scale-solar-
one-quick-way-compare-projects. Accessed July 24, 2012.

OCR for page 127
136 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
FIGURE 5.4 Levelized cost of energy (LCOE) for installed systems. SOURCE: Publicly available data from
the websites of the Department of Energy Loan Program Office, Xcel Energy, Green Fire Times, Tri-State
G
­ eneration, Getsolar, California PUC, Business Wire, U.S. Air Force Academy, Juwi Solar, Winston-Salem
Journal, ­StockAnalyst, EarthTechling, Environmental Leader, and pv-magazine. Figure from Renewable Energy
i
Project Finance, and available at https://financere.nrel.gov/finance/content/cost-utility-scale-solar-one-quick-
way-­ ompare-projects. Accessed July 24, 2012. Reprinted with permission.
c
Even though Figure 5.4 shows the LCOE for installed systems, there is uncer-
tainty because of assumptions such as expected lifetime.
First-Generation Silicon Cells
Photovoltaic technologies that rely on a silicon (Si) p-n junction are referred
to as first-generation technologies, which encompass polycrystalline silicon, mono-
crystalline silicon, and silicon ribbon technologies. The typical conversion effi-
ciency of these technologies ranges from 14 to 22 percent for a module. A labora-
tory record of 25 percent was achieved at the University of New South Wales.21
The theoretical limit for cells of this family is approximately 33 percent conversion
efficiency.22
21 Green, M. 2009. The path to 25% silicon solar cell efficiency: History of silicon cell evolution.
Progress in Photovoltaics: Research and Applications 17(3):183-189.
22 Meillaud, F., A. Shah, C. Droz, E. Vallat-Sauvain, and C. Miazza. 2006. Efficiency limits for single-
junction and tandem solar cells. Solar Energy Materials and Solar Cells 90(18-19):2952-2959.

OCR for page 127
Energy 137
In 2010, over 75 percent of the capacity of PV systems installed was first-
generation solar cells.23 Si photovoltaics are the most mature and widely accepted
form of PV, and they still exhibit some of the highest conversion efficiencies of
available technologies. First-generation PVs are expected to continue to dominate
the market through 2017, although they are expected to lose market share to emerg-
ing technologies. Production of first-generation solar cells is highly competitive,
with no single company holding a market share substantially larger than 10 percent,
and different companies leading in each geographic region.24 The focus for advanc-
ing first-generation solar cells is on reducing manufacturing costs. It is not expected
that this technology will be capable of being produced for less than $1.00/W in-
stalled cost. Figure 5.5 shows first-generation solar cells for power company use.
Second-Generation Photovoltaic Technologies
The second-generation solar cells consist of thin films of silicon, or other
semiconductors, deposited on glass or flexible substrates. The most prominent
thin-film technologies that have emerged are cadmium telluride (CdTe) (see Figure
5.6), thin-film silicon, and copper indium gallium selenide (CIGS). These films
do not convert sunlight into electricity as efficiently as the first-generation silicon
devices do, but the potential for reduced manufacturing costs makes them attrac-
tive. Second-generation photovoltaics accounted for approximately 21 percent of
the global installed capacity in 2010 and are projected to gain market share over
the next several years, providing 38.0 percent of installed capacity in 2017.25
The second-generation cell accounting for most of this installed capacity is a
thin-film CdTe cell. First Solar has commercialized this cell and gained a substan-
tial market share, as the greatly reduced manufacturing cost compensates for the
reduced conversion efficiency (approximately 17 percent)26 compared to standard
Si panels. Several large-scale solar projects based on CdTe technology have been
built, such as the 80-MW facility at Sarnia in Canada shown in Figure 5.6.
CdTe cells have already reached the $1.00/W goal for production cost, but it
is not yet clear how this translates into LCOE. For example, CdTe thin films are
relatively new, so there has not been enough time to establish the lifetime and
23 Frost and Sullivan Research Service. 2011. Global Solar Power Market. July. Available at http://
www.frost.com/prod/servlet/report-brochure.pag?id=N927-01-00-00-00. Accessed July 24, 2012.
24 Kann, S. 2010. The U.S. Utility PV Market: Demand, Players, Strategy, and Project Economics
Through 2015. GTM Research. Available at https://www.greentechmedia.com/research/report/us-
utility-pv-market-2015/. Accessed July 24, 2012.
25 Frost and Sullivan Research Service. 2011. Global Solar Power Market.
26 Kanellos, M. 2011. “First Solar Sets Efficiency Record: 17.3% Percent.” Greentech Media. Avail-
able at http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/first-solar-sets-efficiency-record-17.3 percent/.
Accessed June 6, 2012.

OCR for page 127
152 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
FIGURE 5.15 Efficiency of various types of lighting in 2008. SOURCE: Reprinted, with permission, from Aze-
vedo, I.L., M.G. Morgan, and F. Morgan. 2009. The transition to solid-state lighting. Proceedings of the IEEE
97(3):481-510.
683 lm/W by definition, but for a white light spectrum desired by consumers,
maximum light-producing efficiency will be lower, approximately 400 lm/W. A
typical 100-W incandescent bulb puts out about 1,500 lm, or 15 lm/W per watt
of electricity. Lower-wattage incandescent bulbs are even less efficient. Another
important characteristic is the lifetime of the bulb. A longer lifetime will allow for
fewer replacements over a given period of time, which is beneficial for cost, labor,
and convenience. Lifetime considerations are especially important for bulbs in
inconvenient places, or for those that involve a high labor cost to replace. A second
benefit of much longer lifetimes will be the innovative use of lighting in areas that
are only accessible when a structure is being built. It will be possible to plan lighting
use as a one-time installation in areas that are difficult to reach. A pleasing color
spectrum can influence the efficiency of a lightbulb; sometimes undesirable color

OCR for page 127
Energy 153
content can be more efficient than pleasing color content. The format of the bulb
and environmental impacts are additional factors. Some bulbs contain mercury, a
hazardous material, increasing their environmental impact.
Light-emitting diodes first started to be applied in niche markets like flash-
lights, where battery usage and ruggedness are important. Traffic lights were an-
other early use, as the long lifetime helped reduce the labor cost of replacing
bulbs. LEDs are widely used in cars and are making an entry to headlights as well,
although attaining the required brightness for headlights is difficult with LEDs.61
LEDs are frequently used in brake lights owing to the faster turn-on time of LEDs;
replacing incandescent bulbs with LEDs in brake lights results in a faster turn-on
time by almost 0.2 second. At 60 miles per hour, that translates to approximately
18 feet of additional stopping distance, thus helping prevent collisions. For dash-
board lighting, LEDs generally last longer than the life of the vehicle and thus do
not require replacement for the life of the vehicle. LED lights are also changing
how lights are designed in an automobile, such as with turning-signal lights being
deployed on side mirrors for better visibility.
Large flat-panel televisions are becoming reliant on LEDs for lighting, as dis-
cussed in this report in Chapter 10, “Displays.” The light modulation in these large
displays is still done using a liquid crystal modulator, with LEDs providing the
light. Large-display manufacturers such as Samsung have made major investments
in LED technology and are gaining increasing market share in the LED industry.
LEDs for lighting purposes are becoming more feasible. Walmart recently
replaced the overhead lighting in many of its stores with LEDs.62 A number of cit-
ies have replaced the street lighting with LEDs.63,64,65,66 When the cost of labor to
replace bulbs is taken into account, this can be economically reasonable even now,
61 Car LED Lights. 2010. “Car LED Tail Lights: Where to Get Them.” Available at http://
www.­ ar-ledlights.com/. Accessed October 25, 2011.
c
62 Treehugger. 2011. “Lighting the Future: Walmart Converting Hundreds of Stores’ Lot Lighting
to LEDs.” Available at http://www.treehugger.com/sustainable-product-design/lighting-the-future-
walmart-converting-hundreds-of-stores-lot-lighting-to-leds.html. Accessed November 23, 2011.
63 Green Sheet, City of Ann Arbor Environmental News. 2008. “LEDS—Ann Arbor ‘Lights’ the Way
to Energy Savings.” Available at http://www.a2gov.org/government/publicservices/systems_planning/
Documents/publicservices_systems_envtlcoord_greennews_ledlights_2008_09_08.pdf. Accessed De-
cember 23, 2011.
64 “Town of Chapel Hill.” Available at http://www.townofchapelhill.org/index.aspx?NID=1986.
Accessed December 23, 2011.
65 Los Angeles Times. 2009. “L.A. Mayor Meets with Clinton on City Light Plan.” Available at http://
latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2009/02/la-mayor-meets.html. Accessed December 23, 2011.
66 City of Seattle, Washington. 2010. “Seattle City Light Begins LED Streetlight Rollout.” Available
at http://www.seattle.gov/light/news/newsreleases/detail.asp?ID=10888. Accessed December 23, 2011.

OCR for page 127
154 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
according to a recent article in the Wall Street Journal.67 As the prices come down
and efficiency increases, LEDs are likely to comprise a larger portion of lighting.
The same Wall Street Journal article says that when Home Depot dropped the price
of an LED bulb equivalent to a 40-W incandescent bulb from $21.00 to $9.97, the
sales doubled. Solid-state lighting is used now in locations with inconvenient access
due to the long lifetime, often from 30,000 to 80,000 hours. This is an advantage
over the nominal 1,000-hour lifetime of incandescent bulbs. Halogen bulbs can
have up to 5,000 or 6,000 hours of lifetime, while fluorescent bulbs can run 6,000
to 10,000 hours. Table 5.1 shows some LEDs available in August 2012 from a com-
mon supplier.
The Department of Energy issued the “L Prize” to promote the development
of efficient lighting (see Box 5.3). In addition to the webpage shown in Box 5.3, a
second website (see Table 5.2)68 describes the requirements for the 60-W replace-
ment bulb. There were two submissions for the 60-W replacement “L Prize.” Philips
Lumileds Lighting won this prize.
There is an upcoming “21st century” prize, which has not yet been officially
published. In spite of that, one LED maker has already announced a bulb that ap-
pears capable of meeting the stringent requirements for the 21st century bulb.69
This concept bulb emits 1,331 lumens at 8.7 W with a Color Rendering Index (CRI)
of 91 and a warm color of 2800 kelvin (K). A standard 75-W incandescent bulb
puts out about 1,170 lumens. Figure 5.16 shows a picture of the bulb.
The United States has two companies in the top-10 list of high-brightness LED
manufacturers. These are Philips Lumileds Lighting and Cree.70 Philips also has a
strong European presence. Table 5.3, from LED Magazine, gives the top-10 high-
brightness LED manufacturers by revenue in 2010.71
There are several key technical challenges to be met before LEDs can be widely
deployed in homes for everyday use.
The CRI, a measure of the quality of light, has maximum value of 100. When
illuminated by a low-CRI light source, objects appear to be different colors than
they would if illuminated by the Sun. To obtain a high CRI, the light source must
contain the right colors. This can be accomplished either using fluorescent phos-
67 Linebaugh, Kate. 2011. “The Math Changes on Bulbs: Modern LEDS, While Expensive, Save
Companies on Labor.” Wall Street Journal. Available at http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424
052970203537304577031912827196558.html. Accessed July 24, 2012.
68 More information on the Department of Energy’s “L Prize” is available at http://www.lighting
prize.org/requirements.stm. Accessed October 25, 2011.
69 Jetson Green. 2011. “Cree Demos 152 LPW LED Bulb Concept.” Available at http://www.jetson
green.com/2011/08/cree-demos-21st-century-led-bulb.html. Accessed July 24, 2012.
70 LED Magazine. 2011. “Strategies Unlimited Unveils Top-Ten List of LED Manufacturers.” Avail-
able at http://www.ledsmagazine.com/news/8/2/29. Accessed July 24, 2012.
71 LED Magazine. 2011. “Strategies Unlimited Unveils Top-Ten List of LED Manufacturers.”

OCR for page 127
Energy 155
TABLE 5.1 Selected Light-Emitting Diode (LED) Lightbulbs Available on the Web in August 2012
Bulb Power (watts) Lumens Lumens per Watt Lifetime (hours) Price ($)
MR-16 4.5 348 77 30,000 19.95
A19 8.5 610 71 40,000 28.95
PAR 30 9 673 75 30,000 44.00
SOURCE: LED Waves. Available at www.ledwaves.com.
phors, or by 3 or 4 narrowband lines at the right wavelengths. In the phosphor
converted (PC)-LED approach, an LED emits blue light, generally around 450 to
460 nm. Some of this light is emitted directly, and some of it is down-converted by
a phosphor from the 450-to-460 nm wavelength (blue) to longer wavelengths (e.g.,
green, yellow, red) to produce white light.72 The 3 or 4 line approach is often called
RGB, for red, green, blue. If the efficiency of all blue, green, and red LEDs is as high
as that of blue LEDs, theoretically about 20 percent higher efficiency can be gained
using RGB color rendering compared to blue + phosphor LED due to the nar-
rowband spectra, and another 20 percent can be gained in efficiency because there
is no Stokes loss in the phosphor. RGB color rendering is theoretically the most
efficient. Unfortunately there are no green LEDs, and also, color shifts during the
lifetime of products (as R, G, and B will degrade at different rates). Currently, white
LEDs are manufactured with violet/blue LEDs covered with yellow phosphors to
convert part of the violet/blue light to yellow. Since the emission wavelength of an
LED changes with its drive current, fixture, temperature, and age, the CRI is highly
variable. Research on solving the droop problem, efficient phosphors to convert
to green and red wavelengths, and efficient yellow/green/red LEDs is important.
Many recent promising works are based on nanostructured materials such as In-
GaN nanowire LEDs and quantum-dot phosphors. For the RGB approach to color
rendering, there is a lack of a green LED at the right wavelength, about 540 nm.
The cost of white LEDs is still very high due to the lack of scalability in the
manufacturing processes. Often the (In, Al) GaN material is grown by ­metalorganic
chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD) on a sapphire substrate. The sapphire sub-
strate is relatively expensive and does not scale down with increasing wafer size.
The processing steps, typically involving a flip-chip or liftoff process to remove
the substrate, are complex and difficult to mass-produce. Recently, there has been
increased interest in using Si as the substrate for GaN LED manufacturing. This
can greatly simplify the substrate removal process, as the substrate cost would
72 BardsleyConsulting, Navigant Consulting, Inc., Radcliffe Advisors, Inc., SB Consulting, and
Solid State Lighting Services, Inc. 2012. Solid-State Lighting Research and Development: Multi Year
Program Plan March 2011 (Updated May 2011). Report prepared for Lighting Research and Devel-
opment Building Technologies Program, DOE. Available at http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/buildings/
publications/pdfs/ssl/ssl_mypp2011_web.pdf. Accessed July 24, 2012.

OCR for page 127
156 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
BOX 5.3
Department of Energy Establishes the L Prize
“The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 directs the U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) to establish the Bright Tomorrow Lighting Prize (L Prize) competition. The L
Prize competition is the first government-sponsored technology competition designed to spur
development of ultra-efficient solid-state lighting products to replace the common light bulb.”
(See Figure 5.3.1.)
FIGURE 5.3.1 Webpage showing the “L Prize” World Wide Web page (July 2, 2011). SOURCE:
Figure available at http://challenge.gov/DOE/43-bright-tomorrow-lighting-prize.
SOURCE: The quotation above from the Department of Energy is available at http://­ hallenge.
c
gov/DOE/43-bright-tomorrow-lighting-prize.

OCR for page 127
Energy 157
TABLE 5.2 Requirements for a 60-W Incandescent Replacement Lamp
More than 90 lumens per watt
Less than 10 watts
More than 900 lumens
More than 25,000 hour life
More than 90 in Color Rendering Index
Between 2700 and 3000 K in Correlated Color Temperature
SOURCE: Information available at http://www.lightingprize.org/requirements.stm.
FIGURE 5.16 Bulb
that exceeds the
21st-century “L Prize”
standards. SOURCE:
Courtesy of Cree, Inc.
TABLE 5.3 Top-10 High-Brightness LED
M
­ anufacturers, by Revenue in 2010
2010 Ranking Company Name
1 Nichia
2 Samsung LED
3 Osram Opto Semiconductors
4 Philips Lumileds Lighting
4 Seoul Semiconductor
6 Cree
6 LG Innotek
8 Sharp
9 Everlight
9 Toyoda Gosei
NOTE: Companies have the same ranking when the difference
in revenue is within the margin of error. Revenue includes pack-
aged LED sales only.
SOURCE: LED Magazine. 2011. “Strategies Unlimited Unveils
Top-Ten List of LED Manufacturers.” Available at http://www.
ledsmagazine.com/news/8/2/29.

OCR for page 127
158 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
decrease with increasing size. Finally, the production volume can be easily scaled
up, leveraging manufacturing equipment developed for silicon integrated circuits.
This makes GaN on Si a promising approach for lowering costs. Recently ­Bridgelux
showed cool-white LED efficiencies as high as 160 lm/W at a correlated color
temperature of 4350 K, and warm-white GaN on Si LEDs delivered 125 lm/W
at a color temperature of 2940 K and CRI of 80.73 As an alternative to a sapphire
substrate, at least one company, Cree, uses SiC. It currently has cost issues similar
to those involved in using sapphire but produces the highest-efficiency LEDs. The
231 lm/W record was obtained using an SiC substrate. SiC holds the promise of
significantly lower costs74 if SiC can be made on larger wafers and scaled for larger-
volume applications.
The alternating current-direct current (AC-DC) converter and heat sink for
high-brightness LEDs also contribute to the high cost. LEDs are DC devices and
thus require an AC-DC converter for many applications. Due to parasitic series
resistance and other irradiative recombination paths, a substantial amount of heat
is produced under high current injection, which degrades the LED performance.
In fact, the LED chip itself contributes only 40 percent of the total cost of an LED
bulb—more than half of the cost is for converter, heat sink, and light ray design.
The LED efficiency at operating temperatures is still low. The high lumen per
watt efficiencies reported by various companies and laboratories were typically
measured at room temperature, yet during normal operation, the temperature of
the device usually rises to 80-100°C. This reduces the efficiency by 15 to 20 percent.
To increase the efficiency, a number of aspects have to be improved.
LED package designs need to focus on heat removal to keep operating tem-
peratures low, even for bulbs producing significant light.
The internal quantum efficiency (IQE) of InGaN/GaN quantum wells (QWs)
needs to improve. The IQE is defined as the percentage of electron-hole recom-
binations in the active region that generates light. GaN materials are grown on
a sapphire substrate with a large lattice mismatch, which results in a high defect
density (approximately 109 cm−3). In addition, there is a greater than 2 percent
lattice mismatch between the well and barrier materials for a typical active region,
InGaN/GaN QWs, which also leads to defects. These defects present paths for non-
radiative recombination of carriers, leading to a reduced IQE and increased heat
dissipation in the active region. Improving material quality is thus critical. Many
73 Nusca, Andrew. 2011. “Bridgelux Shatters LED Efficiency Record with Silicon Tech.” Smart
Planet. Available at http://www.smartplanet.com/blog/smart-takes/bridgelux-shatters-led-efficiency-
record-with-silicon-tech/18252. Accessed December 18, 2011.
74 Ozpineci, B., and L. Tolbert. 2011. “Silicon Carbide: Smaller, Faster, Tougher.” IEEE Spec-
trum. Available at http://spectrum.ieee.org/semiconductors/materials/silicon-carbide-smaller-faster-
tougher. Accessed July 24, 2012.

OCR for page 127
Energy 159
recent publications indicate that defects can be greatly reduced in nanostructures
grown on lattice-mismatched substrates.75,76
There is a built-in electric field in InGaN QWs grown on a c-plane sapphire,
the lowest-cost and most commonly used sapphire substrate. This built-in electric
field leads to Quantum-Confined Stark Effect (QCSE) in QWs, causing an even
lower IQE and blue-shifted wavelength with current injection. The latter reduces
the conversion efficiency of yellow phosphors. Finally, better current-spreading
schemes are critical to avoid current crowding, which in turn reduces ohmic heat
and Auger recombination. With less heat produced, efficiency droop at high injec-
tion current can be suppressed.
FINDINGS
Finding: When compared to today’s fossil fuel alternatives, current solar power is
not yet cost-effective in most areas for utility-scale application without subsidies.
Solar-based electricity generation for utility-scale power is, however, making ex-
cellent progress toward the goal of cost parity against fossil-fuel-based electricity
generation approaches. It is the opinion of the committee that development of
cost-competitive solar power for utility-scale application over the next decade is
feasible, and in fact likely. Major solar cell providers have plans to reach cost parity
by about 2015. Cost parity will come in stages and initially will occur only in areas
of bright sunlight, with expensive alternatives, during peak-load times.
Finding: If cost parity or better is achieved, with solar power becoming the most
economically attractive method of building a new electricity generation facility,
then much more land will be used for solar power, regardless of the particular
solar power approach.
Finding: Optimal solar power concentration approaches are key to effective
utility-scale solar power plants in areas with significant direct sunlight.
Finding: The electric grid distribution system can influence the benefits associ-
ated with solar power if power can be transferred across time zones, making use
of available sunlight in multiple time zones.
Finding: Solid-state lighting is making great progress in efficiency, brightness,
75 Sburlan, S., A. Nakano, and P.D. Dapkus. 2012. Effect of
substrate strain on critical dimensions of
highly lattice mismatched defect-free nanorods. Journal of Applied Physics 111(5):054907-054907-6.
76 Zytkiewicz, Z.R. 2002. Laterally overgrown structures as substrates for lattice mismatched epi-
taxy. Thin Solid Films 412(1-2):64-75.

OCR for page 127
160 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
color balance, and cost and is already very attractive for many niche applications.
Solid-state lighting is already cost-competitive for general lighting applications in
which significant labor is involved in changing lightbulbs.
Finding: There is no suitable green LED available to allow efficient RGB color
rendering.
RECOMMENDATIONS AND GRAND CHALLENGE QUESTION
Key Recommendation: The Department of Energy (DOE) should develop a plan
for grid parity across the United States by 2020.
“Grid parity” is defined here as the situation in which any power source is no
more expensive to use than power from the electric grid. Solar power electric plants
should be as cheap, without subsidies, as alternatives. It is understood that this will
be more difficult in New England than in the southwestern United States, but the
DOE should strive for grid parity in both locations.
Even though significant progress is being made toward reducing the cost of
solar energy, it is important that the United States bring the cost of solar energy
down to the price of other current alternatives without subsidy and maintain a
significant U.S. role in developing and manufacturing solar energy alternatives.
There is a need not only for affordable renewable energy but also for creating jobs
in the United States. A focus in this area can contribute to both. Lowering the cost
of solar cell technology will involve both technology and manufacturing advances.
This key recommendation leads directly to the fourth grand challenge
question:
4.
How can U.S. energy stakeholders achieve cost parity across the nation’s
electric grid for solar power versus new fossil-fuel-powered electric plants
by the year 2020?
The impact on U.S. and world economies from being able to answer this ques-
tion would be substantial. Imagine what could be done with a renewable energy
source, with minimal environmental impact, that is more cost-effective than nonre-
newable alternatives. Although this is an ambitious goal, the committee poses it as
a grand challenge question, something requiring an extra effort to achieve. Today,
it is not known how to achieve this cost parity with current solar cell technologies.
Additionally, it is important to recall the statement made in 2010 by the America’s
Energy Future Panel on Electricity from Renewable Resources in the report Electric-
ity from Renewable Resources: Status, Prospects, and Impediments.

OCR for page 127
Energy 161
For the time period from the present to 2020, there are no current technological con-
straints for wind, solar photovoltaics and concentrating solar power, conventional
geothermal, and biopower technologies to accelerate deployment. The primary
current barriers are the cost-competitiveness of the existing technologies relative
to most other sources of electricity (with no costs assigned to carbon emissions or
other currently unpriced externalities), the lack of sufficient transmission capacity
to move electricity generated from renewable resources to distant demand centers,
and the lack of sustained policies.77
The second major area in which optics can contribute to energy security in the
United States is through solid-state lighting.
Key Recommendation: The DOE should strongly encourage the development
of highly efficient light-emitting diodes (LEDs) for general-purpose lighting and
other applications.
For example, the DOE could move aggressively toward its 21st-century light-
bulb, with greater than 150 lm/W, a color rendering index greater than 90, and a
color temperature of approximately 2800 K. Since one major company has already
published results meeting the technical requirements for the 21st-century lightbulb,
the DOE should consider releasing this competition in 2012. Major progress is be-
ing made in solid-state lighting, which has such advantages over current lighting
alternatives as less wasted heat generation and fast turn-on time. The United States
needs to exploit the current expertise in solid state lighting to bring this technology
to maturity and to market.
Recommendation: The DOE should:
1. Develop high-temperature solar cells suitable for use in conjunction with
CSP systems. These solar cells can provide sunlight conversion to electricity
in addition to the CSP thermal conversion. Moderate-efficiency solar cell
electricity generation in addition to thermal electricity generation could
drive total efficiency greater than 50 percent;
2. Develop more efficient, and less expensive, methods of solar power con-
centration for both low and high levels of concentration;
3. Develop methods to reduce LED costs, such as growing LEDs on silicon,
or increasing SiC wafer sizes, or other LED substrate cost-reduction ap-
proaches; and
4. Develop efficient green LEDs to support quality RGB LED color rendering.
77 NAS-NAE-NRC. 2010. Electricity from Renewable Resources: Status, Prospects, and Impediments.
Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press, p. 4.

OCR for page 127
162 Optics and Photonics: Essential Technologies for O u r N at i o n
Recommendation: Governmental land use planning bodies should consider the
potential impacts of a significant increase in land use associated with solar electric
power plants.
Recommendation: The DOE and electric utilities should evaluate the electric grid
for power movement across multiple time zones and evaluate whether changes
should be made to support the period of time when grid parity is reached for
solar power.

Bookmark this page

Important Notice

As of 2013, the National Science Education Standards have been replaced by the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), available as a print book, free PDF download, and online with our OpenBook platform.